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A research study in Switzerland has come up with the surprise result that fat, which is often cited as the ideal culprit of type 2 diabetes, may even have a role to play in actually protecting a person from the onset of the disease.</p>
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&quot;Indeed, fat does not necessarily aggravate the disease and could even play a protective role: by studying insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells, scientists from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, have shown that these cells suffered less from excess sugar when they had previously been exposed to fat.</p>
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By investigating the cellular mechanisms at work, the researchers discovered how a cycle of fat storage and mobilisation allows cells to adapt to excess sugar. These results, published in the journal <span style="color:#f00;"><a href="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00125-021-05633-x">Diabetologia</a></span>, highlight an unexpected biological mechanism that could be used as a lever to delay the onset of type 2 diabetes.</p>
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<strong>When fat lends a hand to beta cells</strong></p>
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In order to differentiate the effect of fat from that of sugar, the scientists exposed beta cells to an excess of sugar, of fat, and then to a combination of the two. The toxicity of sugar was first confirmed: beta cells exposed to high sugar levels secreted much less insulin than normal. &ldquo;When cells are exposed to both too much sugar and too much fat, they store the fat in the form of droplets in anticipation of less prosperous times&rdquo;, explains Lucie Oberhauser, a researcher in the Department of Cell Physiology and Metabolism at the UNIGE Faculty of Medicine, and first author of this work.</p>
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&ldquo;Surprisingly, we have shown that this stock of fat, instead of worsening the situation, allows insulin secretion to be restored to near-normal levels. The adaptation of beta cells to certain fats would thus contribute to maintain normal blood sugar levels.&rdquo;</p>
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<strong>The essential use of fat</strong></p>
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By further analysing the cellular changes at stake, the research team realised that fat droplets were not static reserves, but were the site of a dynamic cycle of storage and mobilisation. And thanks to these released fat molecules, beta cells adapt to the excess sugar and maintain a near-normal insulin secretion. &ldquo;This release of fat is not really a problem as long as the body uses it as a source of energy&rdquo;, adds Pierre Maechler. &ldquo;To avoid developing diabetes, it is important to give this beneficial cycle a chance to be active, for example by maintaining regular physical activity.&rdquo;</p>
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Scientists are now trying to determine the mechanism by which this released fat stimulates insulin secretion, in the hope of discovering a way to delay the onset of diabetes.</p>
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However, while the culpability of sugar is no longer in doubt, the role of fat in beta cell dysfunction remains ambiguous. What are the cellular mechanisms involved? &ldquo;To answer this key question, we studied how human and murine beta cells adapt to an excess of sugar and/or fat&rdquo;, explains Pierre Maechler, a Professor in the Department of Cell Physiology and Metabolism and in the Diabetes Centre of the UNIGE Faculty of Medicine, who led this work.</p>
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